Julius Severus (JE | WPGWPG) Roman general; consul in 127. Later he held a number of offices in the provinces, and was legate of Dacia, Mœsia, and...
Lucius Septimius; Severus (JE | WPGWPG) Emperor of Rome from 193 to 211 C.E. At the beginning of his reign he was obliged to war against his rival, Pescennius Niger...
Seville (JE | WPGWPG) Capital of the former kingdom of Seville; after Madrid the greatest and most beautiful city of Spain. The community of Seville...
Julius Africanus Sextus (JE | WPGWPG) Byzantine chronographer, noted for his surprisingly lucid interpretations of some Biblical questions; flourished in the first...
Abraham Sfej (JE | WPGWPG) Rabbinical author; born at Tunis in the early part of the eighteenth century; died at Amsterdam in 1784, while discharging...
SfornoJE (JE | WPGWPG) Italian family, many members of which distinguished themselves as rabbis and scholars. The most prominent of these were the...
Sha'atnezJE (JE | WPGWPG) Fabric consisting of a mixture of wool and linen, the wearing of which is forbidden by the Mosaic law (Lev. xix. 19; Deut...
Jeshua Shababo (V11p213001jpg) (JE | WPGWPG) Egyptian scribe and rabbi; lived in the last quarter of the seventeenth century. His teachers were Rabbis Abraham ha-Levi...
Shabbat (JE | WPGWPG) Treatise in the Mishnah, Tosefta, and both Talmuds; devoted chiefly to rules and regulations for the Sabbath. The Scriptural...
Shabbat ha-Gadol (JE | WPGWPG) the Sabbath preceding Passover. The designation "great" for this Sabbath is mentioned by Rashi (11th cent.), and is due to...
Shabbat Goy (JE | WPGWPG) the Gentile employed in a Jewish household on the Sabbath-day to perform services which are religiously forbidden to Jews...
Shabbat Nahamu (JE | WPGWPG) First Sabbath after the Ninth of Ab; so called because the hafṭarah begins with the words: "Nachamu, nachamu...
Shabbat Shubah (JE | WPGWPG) the Sabbath between Rosh ha-Shanah and Yom Kippur; so called from the first words of the hafṭarah read on that day,...
Shabbethai Be'er (Fonte) (JE | WPGWPG) Italian rabbi of the seventeenth century; author of "Be'er 'Esek" (Venice, 1674), a collection of 112 responsa...
Shabbethai ben Isaac (JE | WPGWPG) Talmudist and grammarian; born at Lublin, Poland; lived at Przemysl in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; teacher of...
Shabbethai b. Meïr ha-Kohen (Shak) (JE | WPGWPG) Russian Talmudist; born at Wilna 1621; died at Holleschau on the 1st of Adar (Rishon), 1662. In 1633 he entered the yeshibah...
Shabbethai ben Moses (JE | WPGWPG) Halakist and liturgical poet; flourished at Rome in the first half of the eleventh century. of his halakic decisions only...
Shabbethai ben Moses ha-Kohen (JE | WPGWPG) Rabbi of Semeez (Semetch), near Tikoczin, Russia, in the first half of the eighteenth century. He edited "Minchat Kohen"...
Shabbethai Nawawi (JE | WPGWPG) Rabbi and scholar of the end of the seventeenth century; lived in Rosetta (), Egypt. He was a contemporary of Abraham b. Mordecai...
Shabbethai Raphael (JE | WPGWPG) Shabbethaian agitator of the seventeenth century; a native of Morea. About 1667 Shabbethai Raphael was in Italy, where he...
Shabbethai b. Solomon (JE | WPGWPG) Rabbi and scholar; lived at Rome in the second half of the thirteenth century. In the controversy regarding the study of philosophy...
Shabbethai Zebi b. Mordecai (JE | WPGWPG) Pseudo-Messiah and cabalist; founder of the Shabbethaian sect; born on the Ninth of Ab (July 23, 1626) at Smyrna; died, according...
Shadrach (JE | WPGWPG) Name given by the chief of the eunuchs to Hananiah (Dan. i. 7 et passim). Various theories as to its etymology have been put...
Shahar Abakkshka [he] (JE | WPGWPG) Morning hymn written about 1050 by Solomon ibn Gabirol (Zunz, "Literaturgesch." p. 188), whose name appears in an acrostic...
Shalom Shakna (JE | WPGWPG) Polish Talmudist; born about 1510; died at Lublin Oct. 29, 1558. He was a pupil of Jacob Pollak, founder of the method of...
Isaac ha-Kohen Shalal (Sholal) (JE | WPGWPG) Head ("nagid") of the community of Cairo, Egypt, in succession to his uncle Nathan ha-Kohen Shalal; died, according to Grä...
Shallum (JE | WPGWPG) King of Israel who dethroned Zechariah, the last of Jehu's dynasty, and succeeded him. He was in turn dethroned by Menahem...
Shalmaneser (JE | WPGWPG) King of Assyria from 727 to 722 B.C.; successor, and possibly son, of Tiglath-pileser III. According to II Kings xvii. 3-6...
Shalom of Vienna [he] (JE | WPGWPG) Austrian rabbi; lived at Wiener-Neustadt in the second half of the fourteenth century. He was distinguished for Talmudic learning...
ShamgarJE (JE | WPGWPG) One of the Judges; son of Anath. He smote 600 Philistines with an ox-goad and saved Israel (Judges iii. 31). During his judgeship...
Shamhazai (JE | WPGWPG) Name of a fallen angel. According to Targ. pseudo-Jonathan on Gen. vi. 4, "nefilim" (A. V. "giants") denotes the two angels...
Shamir (JE | WPGWPG) Term designating a hard stone in the Targums, but in the Bible thrice (Jer. xvii. 1; Ezek. iii. 9; Zech. vii. 12) connoting...
ShammaiJE (JE | WPGWPG) Scholar of the first century B.C. He was the most eminent contemporary and the halakic opponent of Hillel, and is almost invariably...
Shammash (JE | WPGWPG) Communal and synagogal officer whose duties to some extent correspond with those of the verger and beadle. In Talmudical times...
Shanghai (JE | WPGWPG) Chinese city. The first Jew who arrived there was Elias David Sassoon, who, about the year 1850, opened a branch in connection...
Shangi (JE | WPGWPG) Turkish family many members of which distinguished themselves as rabbis and scholars. Astruc ben David Shangi: Rabbi at...
Shaphan (JE | WPGWPG) Son of Azaliah and scribe of King Josiah. He received from Hilkiah, the high priest, the book of the Law which had been found...
Isaiah Meïr Kahana Shapira (JE | WPGWPG) Polish-German rabbi and author; born at Memel, Prussia, July 28, 1828; died at Czortkow, Galicia, Jan. 9, 1887. He is said...
M W Shapira (JE | WPGWPG) Polish purveyor of spurious antiquities; born about 1830; committed suicide at Rotterdam March 11, 1884. He appears to have...
Aryeh Löb b. Isaac Shapiro [Wikidata] (JE | WPGWPG) Polish rabbi and grammarian; born 1701; died at Wilna April, 1761. He went to Wilna in his childhood, and married a daughter...
Constantin Shapiro (JE | WPGWPG) Russian photographer and Hebrew poet; born at Grodno, Russia, 1841; died in St. Petersburg March 23, 1900. He obtained his...
Sharon (JE | WPGWPG) Large plain of Palestine, with an average elevation of between 280 and 300 feet above sea-level; bounded by Mount Carmel on...
Moses Aaron Shatzkes [Wikidata] (JE | WPGWPG) Russian Hebrew author; born at Karlin 1825; died at Kiev Aug. 24, 1899. He received a general as well as a Hebrew education...
Shaving (JE | WPGWPG) the Mosaic law prohibits shaving the corners of the head and of the beard (Lev. xix. 27), the priests being particularly enjoined...
She-heheyanu (JE | WPGWPG) the benediction "Blessed be the Lord, our God, King of the Universe, who has kept us alive ["she-hecheyanu"] and sustained...
Shear-jashub (JE | WPGWPG) Son of the prophet Isaiah; so named by his father as a prophecy that God would restore the Remnant of His people or that "the...
Queen of Sheba (JE | WPGWPG) Monarch of a south-Arabian tribe, and contemporary with Solomon, whom she visited. The Queen of Sheba, hearing of the wisdom...
Sheba' Kehillot (JE | WPGWPG) Designation of the following seven populous Jewish communities in the counties of Oedenburg (Sopron) and Wieselburg (Mosony)...
Shebat (JE | WPGWPG) Eleventh ecclesiastical and fifth civil month of the Jewish year (Zech. i. 7); I Macc. xvi.), corresponding to January-February...
Shebi'it (JE | WPGWPG) Treatise of the Mishnah, Tosefta, and Palestinian Talmud. It belongs to the order Zera'im, in which it stands fifth, and...
Shebna (JE | WPGWPG) Chamberlain of the king's palace, the office being filled also by Jotham (II Kings xv. 5). Shebna may be identified with...
Shebu'ot (JE | WPGWPG) Treatise in the Mishnah, Tosefta, and both Talmuds, dealing chiefly with the various forms of the oath. In most of the editions...
Shechem (JE | WPGWPG) City of central Palestine; called Sichem in Gen. xii. 6, A. V.; Shalem, according to some commentators, ib. xxxiii. 18; Sychem...
She'eh Ne'esar (JE | WPGWPG) the pizmon or responsory hymn in the Selichot of the fast of the Seventeenth of Tammuz, the "fast of the fourth month"...
She'elot U-teshubot (JE | WPGWPG) the Hebrew designation for the "responsa prudentium," connoting the written decisions and rulings given by eminent rabbis...
Sheep (JE | WPGWPG) the most usual terms for the sheep are "seh" and "kebes" ("keseb"); "kar" (Deut. xxxii. 14; Isa. lviii. 7) denotes the young...
Shefar'am (JE | WPGWPG) Place in Palestine, three hours distant from Haifa, governed by a mudir. In the second century it served as a refuge for the...
Sheftall (Sheftail) (JE | WPGWPG) American family, well known in Georgia, members of which are at present living in Savannah. Benjamin Sheftall: American...
Shehitah (JE | WPGWPG) the ritual slaughtering of animals. While the practise that prevailed among the nations of antiquity other than the Hebrews...
Pavel Vasilyevich Shein (JE | WPGWPG) Russian ethnographer; born in 1826; died at Riga Aug. 14, 1900. He studied at the University of Moscow, and after conversion...
Shekalim (JE | WPGWPG) Treatise of the Mishnah, the Tosefta, and the Jerusalem Talmud, dealing with the half-shekel tax which was imposed for defraying...
Shekanzib (JE | WPGWPG) Small town near Nehardea, in Persia, perhaps identical with al-Zib on the Tigris, and possibly with ('Er. 64a, MS. reading)...
Shekel (JE | WPGWPG) Name of (1) a weight and of (2) a silver coin in use among the Hebrews. 1. Weight: It has long been admitted that the Israelites...
Shekinah (JE | WPGWPG) the majestic presence or manifestation of God which has descended to "dwell" among men. Like Memra (= "word"; "logos") and...
Shela (Rav Shela) JE (JE | WPGWPG) Babylonian teacher of the latter part of the tannaitic and the beginning of the amoraic period; head of the school ("sidra")...
Shelah (JE | WPGWPG) Youngest son of Judah by the daughter of the Canaanite Shuah; born in Chezib in the shephelah of Judah. His extreme youth...
Sheliah Zibbur [he] (JE | WPGWPG) Congregational messenger or deputy or agent. During the time of the Second Temple it was the priest who represented the congregation...
Shem (JE | WPGWPG) the eldest of Noah's sons, according to the position and sequence of the names wherever all three are mentioned together...
Shem ha-Meforash (JE | WPGWPG) Ancient tannaitic name of the Tetragrammaton. The exact meaning of the term is somewhat obscure; but since the Tetragrammaton...
Shem-Tob ben Abraham ibn GaonJE (JE | WPGWPG) Spanish Talmudist and cabalist; born at Soria, Spain, 1283; died, probably in Palestine, after 1330. From his genealogy given...
Shem-Tob ben Isaac of TortosaJE (JE | WPGWPG) Spanish scholar and physician of the thirteenth century; born at Tortosa 1196. He engaged in commerce, and his business necessitated...
Shema' (JE | WPGWPG) Initial word of the verse, or chapter, recited as the confession of the Jewish faith. Originally, the "Shema'" consisted...
Shema' Koli [he] (JE | WPGWPG) Opening hymn of the services on the eve of Atonement in the Sephardic ritual, preceding Kol Nidre. It consists of twenty-nine...
Shemaiah (JE | WPGWPG) Prophet in the reign of Rehoboam. He was commissioned to dissuade the king from waging war against the Northern Kingdom after...
Shemaiah (Sameas, Samaias) JE (JE | WPGWPG) Leader of the Pharisees in the first century B.C.; president of the Sanhedrin before and during the reign of Herod. He and...
Shemaiah b. Simeon Zebi [Wikidata] (JE | WPGWPG) Scholar of the seventeenth century, of whose life no other details are known than that he was the author of "Mazref...
Shemaiah of SoissonsJE (JE | WPGWPG) Scholar of the twelfth century; a pupil of Rashi. He was the author of the following works: (1) "Sodot" or "Midrash," notes...
Shemaiah of Troyes (JE | WPGWPG) Tosafist of the early part of the twelfth century; a pupil of Rashi; probably the father-in-law of Samuel b. Meïr. He...
Shemana (Semana) (JE | WPGWPG) Scholarly and prominent family of Tunis. Samuel b. Joseph Shemana: Rabbi of Tunis, whose family subsequently settled at...
Shemariah ben ElhananJE (JE | WPGWPG) Head of the yeshibah of Cairo, Egypt, about the end of the tenth century. Abraham b. David ("Sefer ha-Kabbalah," in...
Shemariah b. MordecaiJE (JE | WPGWPG) German tosafist of the first half of the twelfth century; pupil of the tosafist Isaac b. Asher. He was considered an especially...
Sheol (JE | WPGWPG) Hebrew word of uncertain etymology (see Sheol, Critical View), synonym of "bor" (pit), "abaddon" and "shachat" (pit or...
Shephatiah (JE | WPGWPG) Name of several persons mentioned in the Old Testament. 1. Son of David and Abital; their fifth child. He was born while his...
Shepherd (JE | WPGWPG) in the early days of settlement in Palestine the chief occupation of the Israelites was that of shepherding. Traces of the...
Sherira b. Hanina (JE | WPGWPG) Gaon of Pumbedita; born about 900; died about 1000 (Abraham ibn Daud, "Sefer ha-Kabbalah," in Neubauer, "M. J. C." i...
Sheshbazzar (JE | WPGWPG) Prince of Judah, at the head of the first Jews that returned to Jerusalem after the Exile. In 539-538 B.C. Cyrus granted the...
SheshetJE (JE | WPGWPG) Babylonian amora of the third generation; colleague of R. Nachman bar Jacob, with whom he had frequent arguments concerning...
Shetadlan (JE | WPGWPG) Representative of the Jewish community in Germany during the Middle Ages, and in Russia almost to the present day. When the...
Shetar (JE | WPGWPG) For the conditions under which these were drawn up in ancient times see Deed. In medieval times the same principles were carried...
Shiggayon (JE | WPGWPG) Term used as the superscription of Ps. vii. 1, and, in the form , of Hab. iii. 1, although the Septuagint evidently reads...
Shila of Kefar TamartaJE (JE | WPGWPG) Palestinian amora of the third century. In Palestinian sources he is called only by his personal name, but in the Babylonian...
Shiloah (JE | WPGWPG) Locality mentioned in the Old Testament as "the waters of Shiloah" (Isa. viii. 6) and "the pool of Siloah" (Neh. iii. 15)...
Shiloh (JE | WPGWPG) City of Ephraim, where were placed, after the settlement in Palestine, the Ark and the sanctuary of Yhwh at which the family...
ShimeiJE (JE | WPGWPG) Benjamite of Bahurim, son of Gera, "a man of the family of the house of Saul" (II Sam. xvi. 5-14, xix. 16-23; I Kings ii....
Shin (JE | WPGWPG) Twenty-first letter of the Hebrew alphabet. Its name appears to be connected with "shen" = "tooth" (see Alphabet). The sign...
Shinar (JE | WPGWPG) Name for Babylonia occurring eight times in the Old Testament. In Gen. x. 10 the beginning of Nimrod's kingdom is said...
Shinnuy ha-Shem (JE | WPGWPG) the custom of changing a person's name, as a tribute to his achievements, or as a sign that his condition will be improved...
Shir ha-Shirim (Canticles) RabbahJE (JE | WPGWPG) Haggadic midrash on Canticles, quoted by Rashi under the title "Midrash Shir ha-Shirim" (commentary on Cant. iv. 1, viii....
Shir ha-Shirim (Canticles) ZutaJE (JE | WPGWPG) Midrash, or, rather, homiletic commentary, on Canticles; referred to in the various Yalkuṭim and by the ancient...
Shirah Hadashah (JE | WPGWPG) A passage which illustrates the influence of the Midrash on the development of synagogal music. The Biblical prescription...
Perek (Pirke) Shirah (JE | WPGWPG) Chapter of song and praise to God by heavenly and earthly bodies, and by plants and dumb creatures. It is composed of Scriptural...
Shiraz (JE | WPGWPG) City of Persia; capital of the province of Fars. It was founded by Mohammed, brother of Al-Ḥajjaj, in the year 74 of...
Shishak (Sheshonk I) (JE | WPGWPG) the first king of the twenty-second dynasty of Egypt. His grandfather, Sheshonk, descendant of a Libyan soldier, married...
Saul b. Judah Löb Shiskes (JE | WPGWPG) Polish rabbinical scholar; died in Wilna, at an advanced age, March 28, 1797. He is chiefly known as the author of "Shebil...
Shi'ur Komah (JE | WPGWPG) Esoteric work on the dimensions of the body of God and of His several members. It exists apparently only in fragments, the...
Shklov (JE | WPGWPG) Town in the government of Moghilef, Russia; situated on the right bank of the Dnieper. Jews settled there at an early period...
Isaac Vladimirovich Shklovski [ru; uk] (JE | WPGWPG) Russian journalist; born at Yelisavetgrad in 1865. He was educated at the gymnasium of his native town, and at the age of...
Shkud (JE | WPGWPG) Russian town in the government of Kovno, situated at the confluence of the rivers Bortava and Liwba. The earliest written...
Shneor Zalman ben Baruch (JE | WPGWPG) Leader of the rational Ḥasidim called "ḤaBaD" (acrostic formed from "Ḥokmah," "Binah," "De'ah" = "Wisdom...
Shobach (JE | WPGWPG) Captain of the army of Hadarezer, King of Aram, who was defeated and slain by David at Helam (II Sam. x. 16-18). According...
Shoe (JE | WPGWPG) For the greater part, among the ancient Hebrews, the shoe consisted merely of a sole of leather or, less often, of wood, supported...
Shofar (JE | WPGWPG) the ancient ritual horn of Israel, representing, next to the 'Ugab or reeds, the oldest surviving form of wind-instrument...
Shofet Kol ha-Arez [he] (JE | WPGWPG) Important Pizmon of six verses, each ending with a phrase from Num. xxviii. 23. Being signed with the acrostic "Shelomoh,"...
Shomron Kol Titten [he] (JE | WPGWPG) Dramatic elegy by Solomon ibn Gabirol, sung at the conclusion of the order of Kinot according to the Polish ritual,...
ShowbreadJE (JE | WPGWPG) Twelve cakes, with two-tenths of an ephah in each, and baked of fine flour, which were ranged in two rows (or piles) on the...
Samuel Edward Shrimski (JE | WPGWPG) New Zealand politician; born at Posen, Prussia, 1828; died at Auckland, New Zealand, June 25, 1902. In 1847 he went to London...
Shroud (JE | WPGWPG) Robe in which the dead are arrayed for burial. The shroud is made of white linen cloth ("sadin," the σινδ...
Shulamite (JE | WPGWPG) Principal character in the Song of Songs (A. V. Song of Solomon), although mentioned there in one passage only (vii. 1 [A...
Samuel ShullamJE (JE | WPGWPG) Jewish physician and historian; flourished in the second half of the sixteenth century. He was of Spanish descent, and after...
Naphtali Herz Shulman (JE | WPGWPG) Russian Hebrew author; born at Stary Bychow; died at Amsterdam about 1830. He edited Mussafia's "Zeker Rab" (Shklov, 1797)...
Abraham Shuman (JE | WPGWPG) American merchant and philanthropist; born in Prussia May 31, 1839. While still a child he accompanied his parents to the...
Shumla (JE | WPGWPG) City of Bulgaria. According to local tradition there was not a Jew at Shumla until about 1780; but in that year a pasha of...
Shelomo Salem Shurrabi (JE | WPGWPG) Ḥakam of the Beni-Israel community of Bombay; born at Cochin at the end of the eighteenth century; died at Bombay April...
Shushan (JE | WPGWPG) Ancient capital of Susiana or Elam, and the winter residence of the kings of Persia; situated between the Choaspes (modern...
Shushan (Susa) Purim (JE | WPGWPG) Name given to the day which follows Purim—i.e., to the 15th of Adar, on which day, according to the Book of Esther (ix...
Judah Löb Shusslowitz [Wikidata] (JE | WPGWPG) Russian scholar; lived at Shklov in the nineteenth century. He was the author of "Ozar ha-Shemot," a concordance of...
Shylock (JE | WPGWPG) Character in Shakespeare's play the Merchant of Venice." Shylock is represented as making a wager with Antonio, a merchant...
Sibbechai (JE | WPGWPG) Captain under David who came from the town of Shushan, near Ephrath-Bethlehem. He distinguished himself by overcoming a Philistine...
Siberia (JE | WPGWPG) Russian territory in northern Asia, extending from the Ural Mountains to the Pacific Ocean, and from the Arctic Sea to the...
Siblonot (JE | WPGWPG) Talmudic term for gifts presented to a bride by the bridegroom or by the parents. According to some authorities, the word...
Sibyl (JE | WPGWPG) Woman who prophesied, while in a state of frenzy, under the supposed inspiration of a deity. In the Jewish sense of persons...
SicariiJE (JE | WPGWPG) Term applied, in the decades immediately preceding the destruction of Jerusalem, to the jewish Zealots who attempted to expel...
Jules Sichel (JE | WPGWPG) French oculist; born at Frankfort-on-the-Main 1802; died at Paris Nov. 14, 1868. He studied medicine at Berlin (M. D. 1825)...
Nathaneel Sichel [de; ru] (JE | WPGWPG) German painter; born at Mayence Jan. 8, 1843. He studied in Munich at the Royal Academy of Art (1859-62) under Julius Schrader...
Sicily (JE | WPGWPG) Large island in the Mediterranean Sea, southwest of Italy, to which it belongs and from which it is separated by the Strait...
Visiting the sick (JE | WPGWPG) to visit the sick in order to show them sympathy, cheer them, and aid and relieve them in their suffering is declared by the...
Sid, Sidi (JE | WPGWPG) Common family name among Eastern Jews, borne by several rabbinical authors. Abraham Moses Sid: Servian rabbinical author...
Vale of Siddim (JE | WPGWPG) the etymology of "Siddim" is uncertain (see G. A. Smith, "Historical Geog. of the Holy Land," p. 503), though Targ. Onḳ...
Simon Sidon (JE | WPGWPG) Hungarian rabbi and author; born at Nadas Jan. 23, 1815; died at Tyrnau Dec. 18, 1891. His father came from Kanitz in Moravia...
Sidra (JE | WPGWPG) Term, the original meaning of which is "order" or "arrangement," frequently used in both Talmuds to denote a section of the...
Isaac ben David Siebenberger [he] (JE | WPGWPG) Russian Hebraist; died at Warsaw April 2, 1879. He occupied himself especially with apocryphal literature, his translations...
Henry Siegel (JE | WPGWPG) American merchant; born at Eubigheim, Germany, March 17, 1852. At the age of fifteen he emigrated to the United States and...
Karl Siegfried (JE | WPGWPG) German Protestant theologian; born at Magdeburg Jan. 22, 1830; died at Jena Jan. 9, 1903. In 1875 he became professor of theology...
Gottlieb Siesby [Wikidata] (JE | WPGWPG) Danish poet and editor; born in Copenhagen May 4, 1803; died there Nov. 28, 1884; brother of Oskar Siesby. His first publication...
Oskar Siesby [da] (JE | WPGWPG) Danish philologist; born in Ebeltoft, Jutland, July 19, 1833; brother of Gottlieb Siesby. He graduated from the University...
SifraJE (JE | WPGWPG) Halakic midrash to Leviticus. It is frequently quoted in the Talmud, and the study of it followed that of the Mishnah, as...
SifreJE (JE | WPGWPG) Midrash to Numbers and Deuteronomy (for the title "Sifre debe Rab" see R. Hananeel on Sheb. 37b, Alfasi on Pes. x., and Rashi...
Sifre ZutaJE (JE | WPGWPG) A peculiar midrash to Numbers, of especial interest for the study of the Halakah. Its authenticity is wrongly questioned by...
Signature (JE | WPGWPG) Usually a writer inscribes his name at the end of a writing as a certification of authorship or as an indication that he accepts...
Sihin (JE | WPGWPG) Large and populous city in the territory of the tribe of Zebulon, near Sepphoris. After the destruction of Jerusalem it lost...
Sihon (JE | WPGWPG) Amoritic king of the east-Jordan country, whose kingdom extended from the Arnon in the south to the Jabbok in the north, and...
SilasUNR (JE | WPGWPG) A Jew who made himself tyrant of Lysias, a district of the Lebanon. Pompey subjugated him, together with other petty rulers...
Eliezer Lipman Silberman [he; ru] (JE | WPGWPG) German rabbi and Hebrew journalist; born in Königsberg, Prussia, Sept. 7, 1819; died in Lyck, Prussia, March 15, 1882...
Adolf Silberstein [hu; he] (Ötvös) (JE | WPGWPG) Hungarian art critic and writer; born at Budapest July 1, 1845; died there Jan. 12, 1899. After graduating from the gymnasium...
Michael Silberstein [de] (JE | WPGWPG) German rabbi; born at Witzenhausen, Hesse-Nassau, Nov. 21, 1834; educated in his native town, in Hanover, at the Jewish Theological...
Solomon Silberstein (JE | WPGWPG) American philosophical writer; born at Kovno, Russia, March 10, 1845. Educated privately, he received the rabbinical diploma...
Silesia (JE | WPGWPG) Province of Prussia, formerly of Austria. Unreliable accounts date the first settlement of Jews in Silesia as early as the...
Siloam Inscription (JE | WPGWPG) the inscription on the Siloam conduit; the earliest long ancient Hebrew inscription that has been found at Jerusalem—...
Antonio José da Silva (JE | WPGWPG) Portuguese poet; born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, May 8, 1705; died at the stake in Lisbon Oct. 19, 1739; son of Jaão...
Francisco Maldonado de Silva (JE | WPGWPG) Peruvian physician, controversial writer, and martyr; born in San Miguel, province of Tucuman, Peru, about 1592; burned at...
Hezekiah SilvaJE (JE | WPGWPG) Jewish author; born at Leghorn in 1659; died at Jerusalem in 1698; son-in-law of the dayyan Mordecai Befael Malachi. About...
João Mendes da Silva [Wikidata] (JE | WPGWPG) Brazilian poet and attorney; born in Rio de Janeiro 1656; died at Lisbon Jan. 9, 1736. He took his degree in law at the University...
Lucius Flavius Silva (JE | WPGWPG) Governor of Judea in 73; consul in 81. He accomplished the difficult task of taking the fortress of Masada from the Sicarii...
Samuel da Silva (JE | WPGWPG) Physician of Portuguese birth who lived in Amsterdam in the beginning of the seventeenth century. He is known especially through...
Joseph Silverman (JE | WPGWPG) American rabbi; born at Cincinnati, Ohio, Aug. 25, 1860. Educated at the high school, the university (A.B. 1883), and the...
Miguel de Silveyra (JE | WPGWPG) Spanish poet; born in Celorico, Portugal, in the last third of the sixteenth century; died at Naples in 1638. He studied philosophy...
Sima (Sama) (JE | WPGWPG) Babylonian amora of the latter half of the fourth and of the beginning of the fifth century; son of Rab Ashi. He is known...
Samuel Simchowitz (JE | WPGWPG) Russian rabbinical writer; born in the beginning of the nineteenth century; died at Slutzk March, 1896. He possessed a thorough...
SimeonREF:JE>>Simeon in rabbinic literatureJE (JE | WPGWPG) Second son of Jacob by Leah, and progenitor of one of the tribes of Israel; born at Padan-aram. In Gen. xxix. 33 the origin...
Tribe of SimeonJE (JE | WPGWPG) This tribe traces its descent from Simeon, second son of Jacob by Leah. He was the brother of Levi and Dinah, according to...
SimeonDAB (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the first generation; brother of Azariah and uncle of Eleazar ben Azariah. He is mentioned only once in the Mishnah...
Simeon IUNR (JE | WPGWPG) Son of Hillel and father of Gamaliel I. Nothing is known of him except his name and the fact that he was the successor of...
Simeon II (Ben Gamaliel I)+ (JE | WPGWPG) President of the Great Sanhedrin at Jerusalem in the last two decades before the destruction of the Temple. Not merely a scholar...
Simeon (Ben Gamaliel II)JE (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the third generation, and president of the Great Sanhedrin. Simeon was a youth in Bethar when the bar Kokba war broke...
Simeon b. Abba (JE | WPGWPG) Palestinian amora of the third generation; pupil of Ḥanina b. Ḥama, who esteemed him highly, and of Johanan, who...
Simeon b. Absalom (JE | WPGWPG) Amora the period of whose activity is not known. Only two haggadic sentences by him have been preserved. One, on Judges iv...
Simeon b. 'Akashyah (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the second generation. Only one of his haggadic sentences has been preserved, namely, that explaining Job xii. 12...
Simeon b. Boethus (JE | WPGWPG) the first high priest of the family of Boethus in the Temple of Jerusalem. He was a native of Alexandria. He owed his appointment...
Simeon b. Eleazar (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the fourth generation; probably a son of R. Eleazar b. Shammua'. He was a pupil of R. Meïr, whose sentences...
Simeon b. EzronJE (JE | WPGWPG) One of the principals in the war of the Jews against the Romans in the year 66 of the common era, and a partizan of the leader...
Simeon b. Halafta (JE | WPGWPG) One of the teachers of the transition period between the Tannaim and the Amoraim. He was a friend of Ḥiyya, and is mentioned...
Simeon he-Hasid (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna; period of activity unknown. He is not mentioned in the Mishnah; and only one haggadic sentence of his has been preserved...
Simeon b. Isaac b. Abun (JE | WPGWPG) Prominent expounder of the Law and one of the most important liturgical writers of the tenth and eleventh centuries. He was...
Simeon b. Jakim [he] (JE | WPGWPG) Palestinian amora of the third generation: pupil of R. Johanan, to whom he often addressed scholarly questions (Yer. '...
Simeon b. Jehozadak (JE | WPGWPG) Palestinian amora of the first generation; probably the teacher of Johanan, who has transmitted several halakic sayings of...
Simeon b. Jose b. Lekonya (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the fourth generation; contemporary of R. Judah ha-Nasi I. He was the brother-in-law of Eleazar b. Simeon, whose...
Simeon ben Joseph of Lunel (JE | WPGWPG) Talmudist of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. His Provençal name was En Duran. He was a native of Perpignan,...
Simeon b. Judah (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the fourth generation; a native of Kefar 'Ikos (comp. on this name H. Hildesheimer, "Beiträge zur Geographie...
Simeon ben Judah ha-Nasi I (JE | WPGWPG) One of the teachers during the transition period between the Tannaim and the Amoraim. He was the younger son of Judah, and...
Simeon the JustJE (JE | WPGWPG) High priest. He is identical either with Simeon I. (310-291 or 300-270 B.C.), son of Onias I., and grandson of Jaddua, or...
Simeon of Kitron (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of whom only one haggadic saying has been preserved. This is to the effect that it was on account of the bones of Joseph...
Simeon b. LakishJE (JE | WPGWPG) One of the two most prominent Palestinian amoraim of the second generation (the other being his brother-in-law and halakic...
Simeon b. Menasya (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the fourth generation, and contemporary of R. Judah ha-Nasi I., with whom he engaged in a halakic discussion (Beẓ...
Simeon of Mizpah (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the first generation; contemporary of R. Gamaliel I., together with whom he went to the bet din in the hall of hewn...
Simeon ben Nanos [he] (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the second generation; contemporary of R. Ishmael and R. Akiba, with whom he often engaged in halakic discussions...
Simeon b. Nethaneel [he] (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the first generation; pupil of R. Johanan b. Zakkai (Ab. ii. 8), and son-in-law of R. Gamaliel I. (Tosef., 'Ab...
Simeon ha-Pakoli (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the second generation; contemporary of R. Gamaliel II. at Jabneh. He arranged the eighteen benedictions of the daily...
Simeon b. Pazzi (JE | WPGWPG) Palestinian amora of the third generation. In Palestine he was called merely "Simon," this being the Greek form of his Hebrew...
Simeon ben Samuel (JE | WPGWPG) Philosopher and cabalist of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries; of French or German birth. He was the author of a work...
Simeon ben Samuel of Joinville (JE | WPGWPG) French tosafist and Biblical commentator of the thirteenth century. He is once referred to, erroneously, as Samson b. Samuel...
Simeon ben ha-Segan [he] (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the second generation. Some halakic sayings of his have been preserved in the Mishnah, all of which have been transmitted...
Simeon ben ShetahJE (JE | WPGWPG) Teacher of the Law and president of the Sanhedrin during the reigns of Alexander Jannæus and his successor, Queen Alexandra...
Simeon Shezuri (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the second generation and pupil of R. Tarfon (Men. 31a; Tosef., Demai, v. 22). He was called "Shezuri" after...
Simeon of Shikmona (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the second generation and pupil of Akiba. He was anative of Shikmona, a locality in the vicinity of Mt. Carmel...
Simeon b. Tarfon (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the second generation. Four exegetic sentences by him have been preserved: (1) "Ex. xxii. 11, 'Then shall an...
Simeon of Teman (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the second generation. He disputed with R. Akiba on a halakic sentence deduced from Ex. xxi. 18 (Tosef., Sanh. xii...
Simeon b. Yannai (JE | WPGWPG) Palestinian amora of the third century. He transmits a halakic saying of his father's which he had received from his sister...
Simeon ben Yohai (JE | WPGWPG) Tanna of the second century; supposed author of the Zohar; born in Galilee; died, according to tradition, at Meron, on the...
Simeon b. Zabdai (Zebid) (JE | WPGWPG) Palestinian amora of the third century; teacher of the son of Assi (Yer. Shab. 9a). A few of his interpretations of Scriptural...
Simferopol (JE | WPGWPG) Capital of the government of Taurida, Russia, a city on the Salghir river, near Sebastopol. In the beginning of the nineteenth...
Simhah of RomeJE (JE | WPGWPG) Scholar and rabbi of the Roman community in the last quarter of the thirteenth century. He was given an open letter by the...
Simhah b. Samuel of SpeyerJE (JE | WPGWPG) German tosafist of the thirteenth century. Neither the year of his birth nor that of his death is known. He took part in the...
Simhah b. Samuel of VitryJE (JE | WPGWPG) French Talmudist of the eleventh and twelfth centuries; died in 1105. He was a pupil of Rashi and the compiler of the Vitry...
Simhat Torah (JE | WPGWPG) Name given to the second day of Shemini 'Azeret; it falls on the 23d of Tishri and closes the Feast of Sukkot. The...
Simmlein of Halberstadt (JE | WPGWPG) German Talmudist; rabbi at Halberstadt from 1620 to 1650. The period of his activity was practically coextensive with that...
Laurence Mark Simmons [Wikidata] (JE | WPGWPG) English rabbi; born in London 1852; died at Manchester April 5, 1900. He was educated at the City of London School, proceeding...
Simon Cephas (JE | WPGWPG) the first of the Twelve Apostles; the chief disciple of Jesus and head of the early Church. His life became at an early stage...
Gustav Simon (JE | WPGWPG) German surgeon; born at Darmstadt May 30, 1824; died at Heidelberg Aug. 28, 1876. He studied at Heidelberg and Giessen (M...
Jean Henri SimonJE (JE | WPGWPG) Belgian engraver and soldier; born at Brussels Oct. 28, 1752; died there March 12, 1834. He was a son of the engraver Jacob...
Sir John Simon (JE | WPGWPG) English sergeant at law and politician; born in Jamaica Dec. 9, 1818; died in London June 24, 1897. He was descended on the...
Joseph Simon (JE | WPGWPG) American lawyer and politician; born at Bechtheim, Hesse, Feb. 7, 1851. He accompanied his parents to Portland, Ore., in 1857...
Joseph Simon (JE | WPGWPG) Chief of the bureau of the Progressive communities of Hungary, and reporter on Jewish affairs in the Hungarian Ministry of...
Simon Maccabeus (JE | WPGWPG) Hasmonean prince and high priest; died 135 B.C.; second son of Mattathias. In I Macc. ii. 3 he is called Thassi; in Josephus...
Simon Magus (JE | WPGWPG) A personage frequently mentioned in the history of primitive Christianity. According to Acts viii. 9-23, he was greatly fearedthroughout...
Moritz Alexander Simon (JE | WPGWPG) German banker and philanthropist; born at Hanover Nov. 27, 1837; died there 1905. Educated at his native town, he became associated...
Oskar Simon (JE | WPGWPG) German dermatologist; born at Berlin Jan. 2, 1845; died at Breslau March 2, 1882. Educated in his native city (M.D. 1868)...
Lady Rachel Simon (JE | WPGWPG) English authoress; born in London Aug. 1, 1823; died there July 7, 1899; daughter of Simeon K. Salaman and Alice Cowen. She...
Richard Simon (JE | WPGWPG) French scholar and Orientalist; born at Dieppe May 13, 1638; died there April 21, 1721. After studying at the Sorbonne he...
Simon (Simedl, Simoncino) of Trent (JE | WPGWPG) Child victim of an alleged ritual murder by the Jews of Trent. He was the son of Andreas Unverdosben, a cobbler, or tanner...
Simonias (JE | WPGWPG) A city in Galilee, about two hours southwest of Sepphoris. In the Talmud (Yer. Meg. 70a) it is identified with the Shimron...
David Simons [nl; de] (JE | WPGWPG) Dutch jurist; born at the Hague Nov. 3, 1860. He studied law at the University of Leyden (J.U.D. 1883), and then established...
David Jacob Simonsen (JE | WPGWPG) Danish rabbi and author; born in Copenhagen March 17, 1853. He studied at the Von Westenske Institut in his native city, at...
Joseph Levin Simonsen [Wikidata] (JE | WPGWPG) Danish jurist; born in Copenhagen Dec. 26, 1814; died there June 21, 1886. He was graduated from the University of Copenhagen...
Sigmund Simonyi [hu; he] (JE | WPGWPG) Hungarian linguist; born at Veszprim Jan. 1, 1853; studied at Esztergom, Budapest, Leipsic, Berlin, and Paris; he has embraced...
Martin Eduard von Simson (JE | WPGWPG) German jurist and statesman; born Nov. 10, 1810, at Königsberg, East Prussia; died at Berlin May 22, 1899. Educated at...
Simuna (Semona) (JE | WPGWPG) Sabora of the second generation (Halevy, "Dorot ha-Rishonim," iii. 26); principal of the Academy of Pumbedita (520-540) while...
Sin (JE | WPGWPG) Under the Jewish theocracy, wilful disregard of the positive, or wilful infraction of the negative, commands of God as proclaimed...
Sin (JE | WPGWPG) Egyptian city mentioned in Ezek. xxx. 15 et seq.; probably the ancient frontier fortress of Pelusium (so cited in Jerome)...
Sin-offering (JE | WPGWPG) the sin-offering proper is a sacrifice consisting of either a beast or a fowl and offered on the altar to atone for a sin...
Mount Sinai (JE | WPGWPG) Mountain situated in the desert of Sinai, famous for its connection with the promulgation of the Law by God through Moses...
Sinaitic Commandments (JE | WPGWPG) Halakot designated in the Mishnah and the Talmudim as "halakot le-Mosheh mi-Sinai," i.e., as having been transmitted from...
Singapore (JE | WPGWPG) Capital and seaport of the British dependency of Singapore. Jews commenced to settle in Singapore in 1840. For a number of...
Edmund Singer (JE | WPGWPG) Hungarian violinist; born at Totis, Hungary, Oct. 14, 1831; pupil successively of Ellinger, Ridley Kohne, and Joseph Bö...
Isidor Singer [de] (JE | WPGWPG) Austrian economist; born in Budapest Jan. 16, 1857; removed to Vienna with his parents in 1861. He studied mathematics and...
Isidore Singer (JE | WPGWPG) Austrian author and editor, and originator of the Jewish Encyclopedia; born in Weisskirchen, Moravia, Nov. 10, 1859; educated...
Josef Singer [Wikidata] (JE | WPGWPG) Austrian cantor; born in Galicia Oct. 15, 1842. His father, an itinerant Chazzan, destined him for a theatrical career...
Maximilian Singer [Wikidata] (JE | WPGWPG) Austrian botanist, zoologist, and author; born at Leipnik Feb. 6, 1857 (Ph.D. Vienna, 1883). He made a specialty of botany...
Paul Singer (JE | WPGWPG) German Social Democrat and deputy; born in Berlin Jan. 16, 1844. After having attended the real-school of his native city...
Samuel Singer [de] (JE | WPGWPG) Philologist; born in Vienna July 12, 1860; educated at the gymnasium and university of his native city (LL.D. 1884; Ph.D....
Simeon Singer (JE | WPGWPG) English rabbi; born in London 1848. He was educated at Jews' College, received his rabbinical diploma in 1890, and has...
Joseph David SinzheimJE (JE | WPGWPG) First rabbi of Strasburg; born in 1745; died at Paris Feb. 11, 1812; son of R. Isaac Sinzheim of Treves and brother-in-law...
Sippai (JE | WPGWPG) Philistine giant, one of the sons of Rapha (A. V. "the giant"); slain at Gezer by Sibbechai the Hushathite, one of David'...
Hasidic Sippurim (Ma'asiyyot) (JE | WPGWPG) Stories, legends, or tales related by, or of, the Ḥasidic "rebbes" (rabbis)—the "Zaddikim," or "ḳ...
Solomon Sirillo (JE | WPGWPG) Spanish Talmudist of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. He was one of the exiles of 1492, and settled at Safed, where...
Joel b. Samuel Sirkes (JE | WPGWPG) Polish rabbi; born at Lublin in 1561; died at Cracow, 1640. At the age of fourteen he was sent to the yeshibah of Solomon...
Sisera (JE | WPGWPG) General of the army of King Jabin of Hazor. According to Judges iv. 9 et seq., he invaded the northern part of Judea in the...
Sisterhoods of Personal Service (JE | WPGWPG) Associations of female charity-workers who devote time to the care of the needy and the distressed. A sermon delivered by...
Siwan (JE | WPGWPG) Third ecclesiastical and ninth civil month. It has thirty days, and coincides, approximately, with the Roman month of June...
Sixtus Senensis (JE | WPGWPG) Italian convert to Christianity and anti-Talmudic agitator; born at Sienna (whence his name) in 1520; died in 1569. After...
Siyyum (JE | WPGWPG) the formal ceremonial act of completing the writing of a scroll of the Law, or the formal conclusion of the study of a division...
Skeptic>>Jewish skepticsJE (JE | WPGWPG) in a specific sense, one who remains in a state of doubt, declaring all positive truth, religiousor philosophical, to be unattainable...
Lazar Skreinka [Wikidata] (JE | WPGWPG) Hungarian scholar; lived in the middle of the nineteenth century. He devoted himself to teaching and became the principal...
Damianus Skuteczky (JE | WPGWPG) Hungarian genre and portrait painter; born at Kis-Györ Feb. 9, 1850. After he had studied at the Kunstakademie under...
Slander (JE | WPGWPG) the Hebrew terms "'alilot debarim" (occasions of speech) and "mozi' shem ra'" occur in connection with the...
Slave-trade (JE | WPGWPG) Trading in slaves was permitted by all ancient and medieval legislations; even Christian Europe allowed it down to the thirteenth...
Charles Sloman (JE | WPGWPG) English composer, and singer of comic songs; born about 1808; died in London July 21, 1870. He composed "Sacred Strains and...
Henry Sloman (JE | WPGWPG) English actor; born in Rochester, England, 1793; died there Aug., 1873. He was a favorite comedian during Glossop's management...
Benjamin Aaron b. Abraham Slonik (JE | WPGWPG) Polish Talmudist; born about 1550; died after 1619. His signature appears invariably as "Benjamin Aaron ben Abraham ," the...
Slonim (JE | WPGWPG) District town in the government of Grodno, Russia; it became part of Lithuania in 1316. Jews probably lived in Slonim under...
Hayyim Selig Slonimski (JE | WPGWPG) Russian author, scientist, and inventor; born in Byelostok March 31, 1810; died in Warsaw May 15, 1904. Slonimski was the...
Leonid Zinovyevich Slonimski (JE | WPGWPG) Russian publicist; born in 1852; son of Ḥayyim Selig Slonimski. At the age of twenty he began contributing sociological...
David Solomon Slouschz [Wikidata] (JE | WPGWPG) Russian rabbi and preacher; born at Odessa Sept. 11, 1852. Having received an elementary education in his native town, Slouschz...
Nahum Slouschz (JE | WPGWPG) Russian Hebrew litterateur; born at Odessa Nov., 1872. He was educated at the common school of his native city, and, in rabbinics...
David Slucki [Wikidata] (JE | WPGWPG) Hebrew scholar of Warsaw; died there between 1870 and 1880. Besides his edition of David Franco Mendes' "Gemul 'Atalyah"...
Small and Large Letters (JE | WPGWPG) There are about 100 abnormal letters in the Masoretic text of the Bible—many of them in the Pentateuch—which were...
Smolensk (JE | WPGWPG) Capital of the government of Smolensk, Russia; situated on the Dnieper, 250 miles west-southwest of Moscow. Jews resided there...
Peter (Perez) ben Moses Smolenskin (JE | WPGWPG) Russian writer; born at Monastyrshchina, government of Moghilef, Feb. 25, 1842; died at Meran, Austria, Feb. 1, 1885. At the...
Smyrna (JE | WPGWPG) Seaport of Asia Minor, in the Turkish vilayet of Aidin. The city had a Jewish population as early as the time of the martyrdom...
Snail (JE | WPGWPG) Rendering given in the English versions for "shabbelul," which occurs only in Ps. lviii. 9 (A. V. 8). An equivalent rendering...
Isaac SnowmanJE (JE | WPGWPG) English artist; born in London 1874; educated at the City of London School. In 1890 he entered the Royal Academy School, where...
Moses SoaveJE (JE | WPGWPG) Italian Hebraist; born in Venice March 28, 1820; died there Nov. 27, 1882. He supported himself as a private tutor in Venetian...
Joseph Friedrich Sobernheim [de] (JE | WPGWPG) German physician and author of medical works; born at Königsberg in 1803; died at Berlin Jan. 30, 1846. He published...
SobortenJE (JE | WPGWPG) Town in Bohemia, whose community is probably one of the oldest in the province. The community of Soborten includes parts of...
Sobotniki (JE | WPGWPG) A Russian rationalistic organization. See Subbotniki and Judaizing Heresy.
SocialismJE Theory of civil polity which advocates public collective ownership, production, and distribution. Jews have been prominently...
Société des Études Juives [fr] (JE | WPGWPG) Society for the study of Jewish history and literature, and especially of the history and literature of the Jews of France...
Learned Societies (JE | WPGWPG) Nearly every Jewish community possessed, or still possesses, various societies aiming to propagate Jewish learning. There...
Society of American Cantors (JE | WPGWPG) Founded by Alois Kaiser in Baltimore, Md., May 14, 1895. Its object is the elevation of the cantor's profession, the furtherance...
Sodom (JE | WPGWPG) First city of Pentapolis, the others being Gomorrah, Admah, Zeboiim, and Zoar, all situated in the vale of Siddim (Gen. xiv...
Samuel Abravanel Soeira (JE | WPGWPG) Son of Manasseh ben Israel (Abravanel Soeira being the maiden name of Manasseh's wife); born in Amsterdam 1625; died in...
Soest (JE | WPGWPG) City in the province of Westphalia, Prussia. As early as the middle of the thirteenth century Jews of Soest are mentioned...
SoferimJE (JE | WPGWPG) Talmudic treatise dealing especially with the rules relating to the preparation of the holy books, as well as with the regulations...
Sofia (JE | WPGWPG) Capital of Bulgaria, 350 miles from Constantinople. The city had Jewish inhabitants before the ninth century; and this community...
Nahum b. Joseph Samuel Sokolow (JE | WPGWPG) Russian journalist; born in Wishograd, government of Plock, Russian Poland, Jan. 10, 1859. His father, a descendant of Nathan...
Emile-Arthur Soldi [fr] (JE | WPGWPG) French engraver, sculptor, and writer on art; born at Paris May 27, 1846; son of David Soldi, a professor of modern languages...
Solis (JE | WPGWPG) Spanish and Portuguese family of crypto-Jews, some of whom were inquisitors, while others were victims of the Inquisition...
Seal of Solomon (JE | WPGWPG) the legend that Solomon possessed a seal ring on which the name of God was engraved and by means of which he controlled the...
Testament of Solomon (JE | WPGWPG) Pseudepigraphic treatise on the forms and activities of demons and the charms effective against them. Extracts from the work...
Abraham Solomon (JE | WPGWPG) English artist; born in London May, 1824; died at Biarritz in 1862. At the age of eighteen he was admitted as a student to...
Solomon ben Abraham ibn Daud (JE | WPGWPG) Physician and translator. According to Kaufmann and Gross, Solomon belonged to the family of the Spanish translator Abraham...
Solomon ben Abraham ben Jehiel (JE | WPGWPG) Italian rabbi; flourished at Rome in the eleventh century; nephew of Nathan b. Jehiel, the author of the "'Aruk." About...
Solomon ben Abraham ben SamuelJE (JE | WPGWPG) French Talmudist of the first half of the thirteenth century. He was rabbi at Montpellier, and leader of the movement against...
Edward Solomon (JE | WPGWPG) English musician and composer; born in London 1856; died there Jan. 22, 1895. Solomon, who was largely a self-taught musician...
Edward S. Solomon (JE | WPGWPG) American soldier and jurist; born at Sleswick, Sleswick-Holstein, Dec. 25, 1836. On completing his education at the high school...
Solomon the Egyptian (JE | WPGWPG) Physician in ordinary to the Byzantine emperor Emanuel Comnenus; lived at Constantinople in the second half of the twelfth...
Solomon ben Eliezer ha-Levi (JE | WPGWPG) Turkish Talmudist of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries; brother of Abraham b. Eliezer ha-Levi, who quotes him in his "Ma'...
Solomon ben Elijah Sharbit ha-ZahabJE (JE | WPGWPG) Oriental astronomer, poet, and grammarian; lived at Salonica and later at Ephesus, in the second half of the fourteenth century...
Solomon ben Enoch al-Kustantini (JE | WPGWPG) Spanish exegete of the first half of the fourteenth century. Grätz believes that Solomon belonged to the Al-Kusṭ...
Solomon the ExilarchJE (JE | WPGWPG) Eldest son of the exilarch Ḥasdai; ruled from 730 to 761. In consequence of a dearth of teachers, he found it necessary...
Henry Naphtali Solomon (JE | WPGWPG) English Hebraist and educationist; born in London 1796; died there Nov. 12, 1881. He was a son of R. Moses Eliezer Solomon...
Solomon ben Isaac of Orleans (JE | WPGWPG) French tosafist of the twelfth century; elder colleague of the tosafist Joseph ben Isaac of Orleans, together with whom he...
Solomon ben JerohamJE (JE | WPGWPG) Karaite exegete and controversialist; flourished at Jerusalem between 940 and 960. He was considered one of the greatest authorities...
Solomon ben Joseph (JE | WPGWPG) French liturgist of Avallon; lived apparently in the thirteenth century. He composed the following piyyuṭim: "Abbi'...
Solomon ben Judah ha-Babli (JE | WPGWPG) Liturgist of the tenth century. In spite of the epithet "ha-Babli," given him by Rashi (commentary on Ex. xxvi. 15; "Ha-Pardes...
Solomon ben Judah of Châteaulandon (JE | WPGWPG) French Talmudist of the end of the thirteenth century. He carried on a learned discussion with Samson of Chinon and Eliezer...
Solomon ben Judah of Dreux (JE | WPGWPG) French tosafist and Bible commentator of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. He was a disciple of Isaac ben Samuel the Elder...
Solomon b. Judah Löb of Dessau (JE | WPGWPG) German Hebraist and teacher; born about 1662; died after 1734. He was a teacher in Dessau, and is said by Fürst to be...
Solomon ben Judah of LunelJE (JE | WPGWPG) Provençal philosopher; born in 1411. His Provençalname was Solomon Vives. When he was only thirteen years of age...
Solomon and MarcolfJE (JE | WPGWPG) Medieval tale, or romance, describing the adventures and conversations of Solomon and one Marcolf, or Marolf. The adventures...
Solomon ben Mazzal Tob [Wikidata] (JE | WPGWPG) Turkish Hebrew poet and corrector for the press or, perhaps, printer; flourished at Constantinople in the first half of the...
Solomon ben Meïr (JE | WPGWPG) French grammarian and Biblical commentator of the twelfth century, grandson of Rashi and brother of the great tosafists Isaac...
Michael Solomon (JE | WPGWPG) British merchant and politician; born in England 1818; died in Jamaica May 5, 1892. He emigrated to Jamaica at the age of...
Solomon b. Mordecai (JE | WPGWPG) Polish rabbi; died 1609. He was a pupil of Solomon Luria and was rabbi of Meseritz and Ostrog, holding also some rabbinical...
Solomon ben Moses Chelm (JE | WPGWPG) Polish rabbi of the eighteenth century; born at Samoscz, government of Lublin; died at Salonica in 1778. He was successively...
Solomon ben Moses ben Joseph (JE | WPGWPG) Italian liturgist of the thirteenth century; identified by some with Jehiel b. Jekuthiel Anaw, and by others with Solomon...
Solomon ben Moses of Melgueil (JE | WPGWPG) French philosophical writer and translator of the thirteenth century. The supposition that Solomon was a native of Melgueil...
Myer Solomon (JE | WPGWPG) Founder of the St. Alban's Place Synagogue, London; born in the last quarter of the eighteenth century; died Dec. 31,...
Solomon Nasi ben Isaac Nasi Cayl (JE | WPGWPG) Liturgical poet; lived at Marseilles about 1285. Cayl is a family name, derived from Caylus, a town in the department of Tarn-et-Garonne...
Philip S Solomon (JE | WPGWPG) Attorney-general of Fiji; born at Lee, Essex, England, Oct. 15, 1830; died in New South Wales March 24, 1895. Early in life...
Solomon de Sabalducchio (JE | WPGWPG) Physician; flourished in Perugia, Italy, in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Pope Boniface IX., shortly after his accession...
Solomon ben SamsonJE (JE | WPGWPG) Scholar of Worms in the eleventh century; teacher and relative of Rashi, who refers to him as an authority beside his other...
Samuel Solomon (JE | WPGWPG) English quack; born in 1780; died in London 1818. He flourished in Liverpool and was an original and somewhat eccentric character...
Simeon Solomon (JE | WPGWPG) English painter; born at Bristol 1834; died at London March 15, 1905; brother of Abraham Solomon. He early showed signs of...
Solomon Joseph Solomon (JE | WPGWPG) English painter; born in London Sept. 16, 1860. He received his artistic training at Heatherly's, at the schools of the...
Solomon of Tours (JE | WPGWPG) French Talmudist; contemporary of Rashi, with whom he carried on a learned correspondence. Rashi addresses him as "My dear...
Vabian L. Solomon (JE | WPGWPG) Premier of South Australia; born about 1849; son of Judah Moss Solomon. Early in life Solomon went to the Northern Territory...
Solomon de Vesoul (JE | WPGWPG) Son of Manessier de Vesoul, who died in 1375 or 1378. By a decree of Charles V., the Wise, he was appointed clerk and tax-gatherer...
Solomon ibn Ya'ish ben Abraham (JE | WPGWPG) Spanish scholar, physician, and (probably) Biblical commentator; died at Seville in May, 1345. According to a Spanish tumular...
Solomon ibn Zakbel (JE | WPGWPG) Spanish poet of the twelfth century; relative of abu Omar Joseph ibn Sahl, who died in 1124. Solomon was the author of a satirical...
Solomon Zalman ben Isaac (JE | WPGWPG) Polish rabbi; died at Warsaw in 1838. After having filled the position of rabbi at Mashelsk and Praga, he was called to the...
Abraham Solomonov (JE | WPGWPG) Russian author; born in Minsk 1778; died in St. Petersburg. He was a prominent propagandist of the Haskalah movement among...
Adolphus Simeon Solomons (JE | WPGWPG) American communal worker; born in New York city Oct. 26, 1826; son of John Solomons, a native of London who emigrated to the...
Levy Solomons (JE | WPGWPG) One of the founders of the Canadian Jewish community; born early in the eighteenth century; died May 18, 1792. He settled...
Joseph Baer Soloveichik (JE | WPGWPG) Russian Talmudist and rabbi; born at Nieswish, Russia, 1820; died May 1, 1892. At an early age he was sent to Volozhin, where...
Vladimir Sergeyevich Solovyev (JE | WPGWPG) Russian publicist and friend of the Jews; born 1853; died in 1900. In an article, "Rossiya i Yevropa," he opposed the attitude...
Abdallah Abraham Joseph Somekh (JE | WPGWPG) Rabbi of Bagdad; born in that city 1813; died there 1889. He was educated by Rabbis Jacob Joseph ha-Rofe and Moses Ḥ...
Son of God (JE | WPGWPG) Term applied to an angel or demigod, one of the mythological beings whose exploits are described in Gen. vi. 2-4, and whose...
Son of Man (JE | WPGWPG) the rendering for the Hebrew "ben adam," applied to mankind in general, as opposed to and distinct from non-human relationship...
SoncinoJE (JE | WPGWPG) Italian family of printers, deriving its name from the town of Soncino, in the duchy of Milan. It traces its descent through...
Song of MosesJE (JE | WPGWPG) Poem found in Deut. xxxii. 1-43. It is said that "Moses spake in the ears of all the assembly of Israel the words of this...
The Song of Songs (JE | WPGWPG) One of the Five Megillot. The Hebrew title, , is commonly understood to mean "the most excellent of songs, composed by Solomon"...
The Song of the Three Holy Children (JE | WPGWPG) Greek insertion in the Book of Daniel after iii. 23, the only one of the additions to Daniel that really add to the text of...
Leopold Sonnemann (JE | WPGWPG) German journalist; born at Höchberg, Lower Franconia; Oct. 29, 1831. After having acquired considerable wealth as a merchant...
Sigismund Sonnenfeld [Wikidata] (JE | WPGWPG) Hungarian journalist; born at Vagujhely, Hungary, Oct. 1, 1847. He received his education in his native town, at the gymnasia...
SonnenfelsJE (JE | WPGWPG) Austrian family of scholars and writers, descendants of Wurzbach Lipmann, members of which became prominent during the eighteenth...
Adolf Ritter von Sonnenthal (JE | WPGWPG) Austrian actor; born at Budapest Dec. 21, 1834. He was the son of humble parents, and spent his boyhood as a tailor's...
Solomon H. SonnescheinJE (JE | WPGWPG) American rabbi; born at Szent Marton Turocz, Hungary, June 24, 1839. He received his education at Boskowitz, Moravia, where...
Baron Sidney Sonnino (JE | WPGWPG) Italian politician; born at Alexandria, Egypt, in 1849. His father was a Jewish emigrant from Leghorn, and his mother an English...
Ugo Sorani [it] (JE | WPGWPG) Italian jurist and deputy; born at Pitigliano May 4, 1850. He studied law in his native town and in Mondavi, Leghorn, and...
De Sosa (De Sossa, De Sousa) (JE | WPGWPG) Envoy of King John III. of Portugal to the court of Pope Paul III. (1534-50). While he was at Rome the Maranos, seeking relief...
Martin Alfonso de Sosa (JE | WPGWPG) Portuguese envoy at and governor of Goa, in the middle of the sixteenth century. In Cranganore, sixteen miles from Cochin...
Simon de Sosa (JE | WPGWPG) One of the wealthiest Maranos in Portugal in the middle of the seventeenth century. He was one of the conspirators, led by...
Caius Sosius (JE | WPGWPG) Roman general. Although Herod had been made king of Judea by the Romans, he was forced to wrest the country from the Hasmonean...
Joseph Judah Löb Sossnitz (JE | WPGWPG) Russian-American Talmudic scholar, mathematician, and scientific author; born at Birzhi, government of Kovno, Sept. 17, 1837...
Sotah (JE | WPGWPG) Treatise in the Mishnah, Tosefta, and Babylonian and Palestinian Talmuds, devoted in the main to an exact definition of the...
Soul (JE | WPGWPG) the Mosaic account of the creation of man speaks of a spirit or breath with which he was endowed by his Creator (Gen. ii....
South Africa (JE | WPGWPG) Jewish concern with South Africa began, indirectly, some time before the discovery of the Cape of Good Hope, by the participation...
South Carolina (JE | WPGWPG) One of the thirteen original states of the United States. Most of the events relating to Jews occurring in this state have...
South America and Central America (JE | WPGWPG) Certain portions of the American continent which were first colonized by the Spaniards and Portuguese, and which still remain...
Johann Peter (Moses Germanus) SpaethJE (JE | WPGWPG) Convert to Judaism; born at Venice in the first half of the seventeenth century; died at Amsterdam April 27, 1701. On account...
Spain>>History of the Jews in SpainJE (JE | WPGWPG) Jews lived in Spain in very early times, although the legend that Solomon's treasurer Adoniram died there, as well as...
Spalato (Spalatro) (JE | WPGWPG) Commercial port of Dalmatia, and a city of note since the days of the Roman empire. Its earliest Hebrew inhabitants were immigrants...
Meyer Spanier (JE | WPGWPG) German educationist and writer; born at Wunstorf, Hanover, Nov. 1, 1864; studied philosophy and Germanic philology at Heidelberg...
Sparrow (JE | WPGWPG) Rendering given in the English versions (Ps. lxxxiv. 4 [A. V. 3], cii. 8 [A. V. 7]) for the word "Zippor," which denotes...
Specific Performance (JE | WPGWPG) Proceeding by which a court compels an obligor to carry out his contract rather than make him pay damages in money for the...
Mordecai Spector (JE | WPGWPG) Russian Judæo-German writer; born at Uman, government of Kiev, May 5, 1859. His earlier education was in the Ḥasidic...
Isaac Elhanan SpektorJE (JE | WPGWPG) Russian rabbi and author; born at Rosh, government of Grodno, 1817; died at Kovno March 6, 1896. His father, Israel Issar...